Using manjaro32 and spotted an out-of-date Manjaro package?
First, check the Manjaro GitHub sources for core, extra, and community. If it’s in the GitHub sources, it’s a Manjaro package.
You can check whether the package is in the archlinux32 repos directly: https://mirror.archlinux32.org/i686/
Alternatively, check the Arch package list to see whether the package is one likely to be built by archlinux32.
If it’s a Manjaro package, and it’s out-of-date, report here.

I’m only packaging current LTS kernels. Any marked as EOL are dropped. I’ll not be building the mainline kernel.

What about security updates?

I cannot guarantee timely security updates on x32-stable. If this is critical for you I recommend you switch to x32-testing or cherry-pick those packages from x32-testing or x32-unstable as they become available.

Something broke. Isn’t this meant to be stable?

“Stable” means “infrequently changing”, not “everything will work perfectly all the time”. If you want it to mean everything works, you need to help test the things you’re interested in.

I have samba server on Ubuntu 14.04, connecting from Manjaro(mounted with cifs) and recording any file into it results in a crash, sometimes reading the file also crashes system.
I was about to write previously about slowdowns but didn’t have time. Basically how it was with Manjaro updates: Fast write -> Very Slow write -> Crashes on write
I’m not sure where to write bug report, tomorrow i will try to test on 64 bit version.

Accidentally i voted wrong Ah well, the only workaround i’ve find is to connect to samba with KDE options, but its painfully slow opening folders and it copies file on opening then replacing it on writing.